Category Archives: Business & Politics

Business & Politics

B.C. presents strong, unified front in Washington softwood hearings

By Ministry of Forests
The Province of BC
September 13, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Senior representatives from the British Columbia Lumber Trade Council (BCLTC) and officials from the Government of BC met in Washington, D.C., this week for four days of critical hearings for the long-standing softwood lumber dispute. “America’s softwood lumber duties are unfair in every measure,” said Bruce Ralston, Minister of Forests.  Premier Eby and I also recently urged the federal government to elevate the softwood lumber dispute to the highest-level priority.” From Tuesday, Sept. 10, 2024, until Friday, Sept.13, 2024, the first Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) dispute settlement panel heard arguments from all parties regarding the countervailing duty determination for the first administrative review. …Kurt Niquidet, president, BC Lumber and Trade Council said “The appeal process is an essential part of CUSMA that needs to occur in a timely fashion to ensure fair trade with our most important trading partner. Delays in the process have made it increasingly difficult for companies across Canada.

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Canada launches legal challenge after U.S. hikes duties on softwood imports

By Steven Chase
Globe and Mail
September 9, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

…International Trade Minister Mary Ng on Monday announced the Canadian government would challenge the results of the U.S. Department of Commerce’s fifth softwood lumber review. …Canadian lumber producers have already paid the United States more than $9-billion in duties – money that is held in deposit until this latest dispute is resolved – according to the BC Lumber Trade Council. …Ms. Ng said Canada on Monday took the necessary steps to begin two legal challenges under the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) of the U.S. Commerce Department’s review, the deliberations that led to the latest duty hike. …Ms. Ng said Canada is always prepared to strike a deal. …International trade lawyer Lawrence Herman said the only way to stop the endless cycle of duties and appeals is to cut a deal with the United States like the one that expired in 2015. [We respect the copyrights of the source publication – full access to this story may require a subscription]

Read the official statement from Global Affairs Canada here

Canadian Press in CTV News: Canada launches legal challenges of U.S. softwood lumber duty increases

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Canfor mill closures leave B.C. communities eyeing difficult transitions

By Derrick Penner
The Vancouver Sun
September 5, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Vanderhoof Mayor Kevin Moutray has watched the deteriorating conditions of B.C.’s forest industry gather, but it was still a shock to learn that Canfor will shutter its mill in his town of 4,500. …He added Vanderhoof is now pinning its hopes on the transition plans that Canfor and the B.C. government committed to to diversify its economy. …Canfor’s Plateau mill in Vanderhoof and its Fort St. John operation… become the second and third sawmills that Canfor has closed this year and the fourth since the start of 2023. Canfor, working with the United Steelworkers will set up transition offices in both communities to work on “an employee adjustment plan,” according to Mina Laudan. …With the closures, however, United Steelworkers representative Jeff Bromley said opportunities within the company will be slimmer. …“By the end of the year, they’re going to have no other mills in the north. …He’s pushing government to take away some of the timber harvesting rights that Canfor still holds.

In Related Coverage:

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‘I am not satisfied’: David Eby says he will find a path forward for BC’s forestry sector

By Cheyanna Lorraine
Kamloops Now
September 15, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Premier David Eby says he is not satisfied with people closing sawmills in BC and leaving workers stranded. Eby said he and the BC NDP are going to find a path forward to support the forestry sector… The premier acknowledged the “huge strain” the forestry industry was under but said the BC NDP had a strategy in place to lessen the impact. “We’re doing a couple of things. One is getting more jobs per tree,” he explained. “The other is making sure that we’re protecting iconic old growth forests for future generations. And the third is ensuring a sustainable forest industry going forward for British Columbians that connects our trees with the people who are creating jobs in the province and investing in the province is the path forward for us.”

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B.C. Conservatives promise to end stumpage fees, review fire management if elected

Canadian Press in the Vancouver Sun
September 14, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

John Rustad

VANDERHOOF — B.C. Conservatives are promising changes they say will bring more stability to the province’s struggling forest industry. Leader John Rustad announced his plan for the sector a week before the official launch of the provincial election campaign, saying a Conservative government would do away with stumpage fees paid when timber is harvested and instead put a tax on the final products that are produced. Rustad said Saturday that under a provincial Conservative government, a small fee may be charged upfront, but the bulk would come at the end of the process, depending on what type of product is created. He also promised to review how wildfires are managed, as well as streamline the permit process and review what he calls the province’s “uncompetitive cost structure.” …The governing New Democrats meanwhile, say eliminating stumpage fees would inflame the softwood lumber dispute with the U.S. and hurt forestry workers.

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B.C. Conservatives lay out forestry plans following mill closures

Victoria News
September 13, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

John Rustad

B.C. Conservative Party leader John Rustad says B.C. needs to “get back to a place where we respect our forest sector.” Rustad was in Vanderhoof Sept. 14 to announce his party’s policies associated with the forestry industry. He listed several pillars to the policy, including: defining the land area that will be prioritized for the harvest of primary forest products and meeting of biodiversity goals; replacing stumpage with a value-added end product tax; implementing a “one project, one permit” process; undertaking a complete review of how wildfires are managed in B.C.; and investing in workforce training for the forest sector, “so British Columbians can access the expanded opportunities that will be created.” The first thing that needs to be done, he said, is creating certainty for the forest sector. …Premier David Eby said his government will look to connect existing tenures with new users as part of responding to those closures. 

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Vernon-based Tolko shutting down Armstrong mill for two weeks starting Monday

By Darren Handschuh
Castanet
September 13, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Market conditions, a lack of fibre and US tariffs are forcing the two-week closure the Tolko lumber plant in Armstrong. Tolko spokesperson Chris Downey said employees were notified the mill will be taking two weeks of downtime beginning Sept. 16 and ending Oct. 1. “Unfortunately, the availability of economic fibre in BC, combined with weak market conditions and increased US tariffs continue to have an impact on our operations,” Downey said in an email. “As we’ve seen recently, the entire industry is feeling this pressure and while we prefer to be fully operational, difficult decisions are needed to ensure we are sustainable for the future.” Scales in the region will remain open.

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Canfor closures are a ‘shock’ that we all saw coming

By Kennedy Gordon, Editor
Prince George Citizen
September 12, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Kennedy Gordon

…We’ve known for years that BC’s forest industry is in serious trouble. The most recently announced U.S. tariffs aren’t helping. For years, under first the BC Liberals and then the NDP, the approach has been to kick the can down the road when it comes to addressing the ground-level challenges facing the forestry industry. Companies keep harvesting, milling and shipping until the ledger turns red (or looks like it might), and then the saws are unplugged, the mills close and people lose their jobs. It didn’t have to be this way. …The industry has about half the jobs it did 25 years ago. It’s failing. This is odd, considering we’ve had an NDP government in power since 2017. Left and centre-left political ideology usually embraces the opposite of kicking the can down the road. …NDP governments, however, hesitate to support large corporations on ideological grounds.

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Canfor Comments on BC Assets

Canfor Corporation
September 12, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vancouver, BC – As indicated in its September 4 announcement of the closure of the Plateau and Fort St. John operations, Canfor Corporation remains committed to exploring opportunities to divest some of its northern BC tenure to support other BC manufacturers who are facing similar challenges accessing economic fibre to support their operations. The Company has received indications of interest from several parties and will be considering options and engaging in discussions as appropriate. As per normal business practice, further public disclosure will follow only if and when there is a material event to disclose.

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Kruger announces $32m investment in Kamloops to make next-generation specialty pulps

Kruger Inc.
September 12, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

KAMLOOPS, BC — Kruger Inc. announced today a $32.4 million investment at its Kamloops Pulp Mill to implement innovative technology to diversify its product portfolio and expand into fast growing markets. In addition to improving Kruger Kamloops’ competitiveness, performance, and environmental footprint, this initiative will contribute to securing 340 jobs at the Mill, as well as 1,000 indirect jobs in BC …The governments of Canada and BC are contributing $5 million each to this project. …Kruger Kamloops’ new pulp washing system will enhance the plant’s effectiveness and significantly reduce inorganic material and talc in the finished product. The process will also result in a notable reduction in bleaching chemical usage. …Slated for completion in 2026, the project will enable Kruger Kamloops to ramp up production of ultra-clean pulp from 43,000 MT in its first year up to more than 115,000 MT annually in its third year and beyond.

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Sustainable forest-sector manufacturing jobs coming

By Ministry of Jobs and Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
September 12, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

New support for forest-sector manufacturers throughout the province will create jobs, strengthen local economies and promote the transition to high-value, made-in-B.C. forestry products. …Through the BC Manufacturing Jobs Fund, the Government of B.C. is contributing up to $11.4 million to eight forestry-sector capital projects and one planning project in communities throughout the province. …Kruger Kamloops Pulp mill, in Kamloops, will receive up to $5 million to support the commissioning of a new pressure diffusion washer with an AI-powered control system… The Government of Canada is also providing $4.9 million … for this initiative. …Power Wood Corporation in Agassiz-based …in partnership with Squiala First Nation, will receive up to $3.4 million for their project to create a new state-of-the-art thermal modification manufacturing facility that will produce high value, thermally modified wood products that are known for their stability and durability.

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Brink makes pitch to buy Canfor assets in Fort St. John, Vanderhoof, Houston and Bear Lake

By Ted Clarke
Prince George Citizen
September 11, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

John Brink is tired of hearing about … a dying industry and he intends to do something about that… The owner of the Brink Group of Companies has made a proposal to Canfor to buy its mill operations and timber harvesting rights in Bear Lake, Vanderhoof and Fort St. John and forest tenure in Houston. Brink was already pursuing a bid to acquire Polar Sawmill at Bear Lake north of Prince George when Canfor announced last Wednesday it intends to permanently close the Plateau Sawmill in Vanderhoof and Fort St. John Sawmill. Brink has been trying to secure a timber supply to keep his finger-joint lumber plant operating and protect the jobs of his current workforce at Brink Forest Products, Vanderhoof Specialty Wood Products and Pleasant Valley Remanufacturing in Houston. A deal with Canfor would bring Brink’s mills up to full 600-worker capacity and he says there would likely be enough work for 5,000 direct and indirect jobs. 

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OSB mill construction set to begin in Prince Albert in 2025; One Sky Forest Products timber allocation increased

By Nigel Maxwell
Prince Albert NOW
September 12, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Scott Moe

PRINCE ALBERT, Saskatchewan — The stage has been set for an oriented strand board mill to begin construction in Prince Albert. Premier Scott Moe announced Thursday that the province has allocated nearly 1.2 million cubic metres of timber to One Sky Forest Products. “This allocation positions the industry to meet that growth target, working with Indigenous businesses and creating jobs for northern residents, further protecting and promoting Saskatchewan,” said Moe. One Sky was formed in 2020 by Montreal Lake Business Ventures, Meadow Lake Tribal Council, Big River First Nation and Tatanka Oyate Holdings, who brought in Peak Renewables – a BC forest products company – as an industry shareholder. …The OSB plant, which was originally announced in 2021, will share a site with the Paper Excellence pulp mill. …Construction on the $400 million plant is anticipated to begin in 2025 and open in 2027. It’s expected to create an estimated 800 direct and indirect jobs.

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Trudeau says he will continue to fight for Canada’s ‘world class’ forestry industry

By Cheyanna Lorraine
Kelowna Now
September 11, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Justin Trudeau

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he and his Liberal government will protect the country’s forestry industry from a hike in tariffs if Donald Trump is elected as the US President in November. The comment was made while the Prime Minister took questions from reporters in Nanaimo, where Liberal MPs are hosting a three-day caucus retreat… [H]igh lumber costs, mill closures and lost jobs were not only impacting BC but all of Canada and even America. “When we talk about softwood lumber, the reality is Americans are facing a housing crisis as well, Americans are facing challenges with the rising cost of housing and paying more for lumber from Canada makes no sense for the American people,” Trudeau said.

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Ka:’yu:’k’t’h’/Che:k:tles7et’h’ First Nations acquire forest licence from Interfor

Campbell River Mirror
September 10, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Ka:’yu:’k’t’h’/Che:k:tles7et’h’ First Nations have acquired an Interfor forest licence, marking a historic milestone in reclaiming stewardship over their traditional territories and building a sustainable economic future. “It allows us to take control of our forestry resources and aligns with our broader vision of economic growth and environmental stewardship,” says Gary Wilson, CEO and director for economic development for Tiičma Enterprises, the Nation’s company, in a media release from Sept. 10. This acquisition is a significant step for Nations in reclaiming stewardship over their traditional territories, restoring ecological balance, and fostering a sustainable economic future for future generations, the Nations said. For Ralph Friedrich, Interfor’s vice president of coastal operations, the deal represents the forest product company’s ongoing commitment to reconciliation in British Columbia.

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Castlegar’s Ken Kalesnikoff awarded Coronation Medal

By Betsy Kline
Arrow Lakes News
September 10, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

David Eby, Ken Kalesnikoff & Janet Austin

The owner of one of the West Kootenay’s most successful and long-standing businesses has been recognized with the King Charles III Coronation Medal. Ken Kalesnikoff, owner of Kalesnikoff Lumber, was given his medal at an Aug. 27 ceremony held at HMCS Discovery in Vancouver. …Kalesnikoff Lumber was established in 1939 and in recent years has expanded to include a mass timber division that is one of the largest in North America. Along with running the multi-generational business alongside his son and daughter, Kalesnikoff is known for his forest industry advocacy and his work promoting value-added products. …”My whole career has always been about adding value and advocating for the industry and for the independent companies,” said Kalesnikoff, who thinks it is that work that earned him the recognition.

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Province must take back timber rights in wake of Canfor closures

By James Steidle, Stop the Spray
Prince George Citizen
September 9, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

James Steidle

As 500 workers lose their jobs in Vanderhoof and Fort St. John, Stop the Spray BC founder James Steidle is calling on the province to take back mill-less timber harvesting rights. With many communities left in limbo by absentee forestry corporations, Steidle says it’s only fair that those tenures go to someone who can provide the jobs. “Recently Canfor CEO Don Kanye said they will ‘divest’ some of their Northern BC tenures, which means they will sell them. But they aren’t theirs to sell,” said Steidle. 

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Canfor transfers Mackenzie TSA tenure to McLeod Lake Indian Band and Tsay Keh Dene Nation

By Canfor Corporation
Cision Newswire
September 9, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE — Canfor announced on Monday evening that they have transferred their forest tenure in the Mackenzie Timber Supply Area (TSA) to the McLeod Lake Indian Band and the Tsay Keh Dene Nation. “Building on our long-standing relationships, Canfor is pleased to have reached this arrangement that will expand the Nations’ participation in the forest economy and stewardship of forest resources in the region,” said Stephen Mackie, Executive Vice President North American Operations. “We believe this agreement will support improved fibre access in the TSA and generate significant economic benefits for local and regional communities.” Canfor says that the total proceeds from the tenure sale and the quote “previously announced disposition of associated Mackenzie sawmill assets are $69 million dollars.

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City of Port Alberni asks that San Group lawsuit be dismissed

By Carla Wilson
The Times Colonist
September 7, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The City of Port Alberni is denying that it defamed the San Group forestry company and is asking that a lawsuit launched by the company be dismissed. The city asked the Supreme Court of B.C. last month to dismiss a lawsuit filed by the company claiming an overnight search of its remanufacturing plant by local officials harmed its reputation. No allegations have been proven in court and no court dates have been set. In the city’s version of facts filed this week, it said the media published public complaints regarding the living conditions of temporary foreign workers on premises owned by the San Group. …In its response to the San Group’s claim, the city denies it is liable. San Group has rejected suggestions that it was mistreating its temporary foreign workers.

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Canfor decision hastens questions around tenure

By Cheryl Jahn
CKPG News Prince George
September 6, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE – It has been a tough week for more than five hundred Canfor employees between Vanderhoof and Fort St. John, with the forestry giant announcing the permanent closure of those operations. It elicited some immediate demands from many corners about one thing: Tenure and the return of it to the Province. “The reality is they’re divesting our region,” says advocate James Steidle. “They’re taking these mills out. They’re shutting down mills or selling off the sawmills.” …“The government needs to step in and let them know clearly when the mill shuts down, you lose your logging rights. And those logs should be available because it’s not a dying industry,” says Brian O’Rourke, President of the United Steelworkers Union, Local 1-424. “The price of lumber will come back. The softwood lumber tariffs. We’ve won them over and over, over again in courts. I don’t see a different decision coming out.”

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BC has retraining grants available for mill workers losing their jobs

By Ted Clarke
The Prince George Citizen
September 6, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The impact of the pending Canfor sawmill closures in Vanderhoof and Fort St. John is just starting to be felt and the trickle-down effect on the economy in those communities will no doubt worsen once those permanent closures happen. Brenda Bailey, BC’s minister of jobs, says there’s nothing that will soften the blow for the affected workers but the province is doing what it can to set up retraining programs and will help them find work. “It’s horrific news,” Bailey said. …The peripheral effects are so significant. I know this decision by Canfor is a really hard one to hear. A big factor is the increase from the States in terms of softwood lumber and the tariff increase last month. …“Canfor has made these decisions not only in British Columbia but also in some of their mills down in the States as well.”

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Nak’azdli Whut’en chief critical of Canfor’s decision to shut down Plateau Mill

By Ted Clarke
Prince George Citizen
September 7, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Nak’azdli Whut’en First Nation Chief Colleen Erickson lambasted the leadership of Canadian Forest Products in their decision to permanently shut down the Plateau Mill, which will leave Vanderhoof without its largest employer. Canfor announced Wednesday it will close the Plateau and Fort St. John sawmills due to a lack of economic fibre, poor market conditions and increased tariffs on exports to the US. The Plateau Mill has been a fixture in Vanderhoof since 1969. It employs many Nak’azdli members who work in the mill or in forestry operations that supply it who now face the possibility of having to leave their home communities to find work elsewhere. Erickson said it was no surprise to no one realized that the mill was in jeopardy as timber supplies diminished and that it would eventually meet a similar fate as that of other sawmills and pulpmills in the region that have also been closed permanently or curtailed indefinitely.

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BC Council of Forest Industries Responds to Latest Mill Closures

By Travis Joern
BC Council of Forest Industries
September 5, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vancouver, BC – Linda Coady, President & CEO of the BC Council of Forest Industries (COFI) made the following statement in response to the announcement of additional mill closures in BC. “Any time a mill closes, those hardest hit are the workers, their families and the community, and the immediate concern is to ensure they receive the support they need. Yesterday’s closures underscore the urgent challenges facing British Columbia’s forest sector and the need for immediate government action to address the root causes threatening the future of forestry in BC. Forest management, harvesting, and manufacturing supports tens of thousands of jobs across BC, contributes significantly to the provincial economy, and plays a critical role in advancing economic reconciliation with First Nations. …COFI is also calling on all parties in the forthcoming BC provincial election to have a clear and focused strategy that strengthens the forest sector’s competitiveness by addressing three priorities

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Fate of B.C.’s forestry industry emerges as election issue

By Wolf Depner
North Island Gazette
September 11, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

As lumber sawmills continue to close across B.C., Premier David Eby said his government will look to connect existing tenures with new users as part of responding to those closures. …”… Those trees are valuable. We have skilled workers and we are going to find ways to reconnect those trees with the people who are creating jobs and preserving jobs in our province.” … “Without decisive intervention, the viability of this foundational industry is at risk,” Linda Coady, president and chief executive officer of the B.C. Council of Forest Industries. …She called on the provincial government to advance three priorities: increase the allowable annual cut to approximately 60 million cubic metres amidst concerns that it could be as low as 30 million cubic concerns, speed up new forest management methods to help create a reliable supply of timbre and advance new agreements with First Nations.

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Why will lower interest rates not fix the GTA’s housing crisis?

By Dave Wilkes, CEO of BILD
The Toronto Star
September 7, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

It is becoming increasingly clear that any return to a healthy market is not just a matter of waiting for interest rates to drop… Looking at the new home sales data from the first half of 2024, the winter months were characterized by a sluggish market and low sales. Buyers remained on the sidelines, anticipating a spring rebound driven by interest-rate relief. However, the anticipated market return never materialized… Looking ahead, the consequences of this slow period are unmistakable; the record-low sales figures from the past six months will inevitably lead to lower housing starts and reduced housing supply in the next few years, or, as we say, “starts will lag behind sales.”

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Remediation will follow environmental assessment at former Sturgeon Falls mill site

By David Briggs
Sudbury.com
September 10, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

STURGEON FALLS — Last week, West Nipissing received a FedNor grant of $50,000 to complete an environmental study on the former Weyerhaeuser Mill Site. This will be the second environmental study on the property – the first one has been completed – and Mayor Kathleen Rochon expects this one “will be underway this fall and winter.” “There will be core sampling done to test soils and look for any kind of concerns that we may need to address before we move forward with the next steps in getting the lands developed,” the mayor said. “We will move the project forward after that,” she added, “but we need to know exactly what we’re dealing with,” on the former industrial site. “We need to make it safe prior to development.” The municipality purchased the 27-acre parcel of land in 2020, 18 years after the mill closed.

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U.S. Forest Service must protect mature and old-growth forests on public lands

By Nancy Polan
Greenfield Reporter
September 13, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

In 2022, President Joe Biden issued an executive order to save old growth trees on public lands. This year the U.S. Forest Service released a draft National Old Growth Amendment, which could ultimately require weighing the climate impacts of their logging plans, and a commitment to save old growth forests. But that amendment needs to be strengthened before it is finalized. Contrary to current climate science, it includes managing old growth forests with extensive logging, under the guise that logging improves old-growth trees and makes forests more resilient to climate disruptions, extreme heat, fires, and pests. The public and the scientific community are calling on the Forest Service to stop logging old growth forests, and to prioritize the value of forests for climate and biodiversity above the value of timber.

More coverage on the proposed National Old Growth Order, US Forest Service, and Department of Natural Resources discussion:

Columbia Oversight: Washington has few older forests left. Why does the Department of Natural Resources keep logging them?

Eugene Weekly: Old-Growth Forests and Oregon’s Healthy Ecosystems

Duluth News Tribune: Forest Service policy can help maintain, restore old-growth forests

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LL Flooring reverses course, cuts deal to sell assets to founder and former CEO

By Michael Schwartz
Richmond BizSense
September 9, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

In an abrupt reversal just days after announcing it would go out of business entirely, LL Flooring may have a new lease on life thanks to an eleventh-hour deal with its founder and former CEO. The bankrupt Henrico-based retailer on Friday said it struck an agreement for a “going-concern” sale to F9 Investments, a firm run by Thomas Sullivan, who founded LL as Lumber Liquidators 30 years ago. The company said F9 will acquire 219 of LL’s 430 stores, along with the store’s inventory and that of the company’s massive distribution center in Sandston. Also included in the deal is LL’s intellectual property. The sale is expected to be completed by the end of the month, the company said, and is subject to bankruptcy court approval.

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Fighting wildfires with legislation: Preparing congressional staffers to craft effective solutions

By Rob Jordan
Phys.Org
September 11, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

The most effective tool to combat devastating wildfires may be the pen. Writing effective legislation will be key to slowing and even reversing the growth in destructive conflagrations throughout the Western U.S. To better prepare policymakers for this challenge, the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment recently hosted a first-of-its-kind two-day “boot camp” in which fifteen staffers from the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate got a crash course from experts in climate, forestry, fire science, utilities, insurance and other wildfire-related topics… They focused on mechanisms and contributing factors that produce mega fires, as well as conditions required to maintain resilient, healthy forests… Experts emphasized to the staffers that longer fire seasons, fueled by rising temperatures and prolonged droughts, are endangering communities, ecosystems, and public health nationwide.

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Roseburg Announces the Appointments of Tony Hamill as Chief Operations Officer

Rosboro Lumber
September 10, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

SPRINGFIELD, Oregon — Roseburg announced the appointments of Tony Hamill as Chief Operations Officer and Vivek Karuppuswamy as Senior Vice President of Human Resources and Labor. Joining Roseburg later this month, Hamill and Karuppuswamy bring a combined 50 years of operations and HR expertise to Roseburg’s leadership team as the company moves forward with its ambitious capital projects program and new product lines. …As COO, Hamill will coordinate strategy and execution among Roseburg’s manufacturing, sales and marketing, SIOP (Sales, Inventory, and Operations Planning), and engineering teams while enhancing skillsets across the organization that are key to supporting increasingly advanced manufacturing technologies.

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Man vs. Trees: How a Rancher’s Bulldozing Project Cost Utah Taxpayers

By Leia Larsen
The New York Times
September 10, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Mike Siaperas, a wealthy software executive, was looking for a change. He found it 10,000 feet above sea level in Utah, buying a ranch that he would turn into a luxury hunting retreat… Since 2019, state lawmakers have appropriated more than $5 million to support Mr. Siaperas’s forestry work, although less than half of it has been paid out. His proposals have been backed by influential allies, met with little to no competition and relied on unproven or disputed scientific claims. The funding is part of a pattern of questionable contracts the state — led by a Republican governor and a legislature with a Republican supermajority — has awarded over the last decade to politically connected people pushing moneymaking projects they claimed had ecological benefits.

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International Paper Makes Leadership Announcement

By International Paper
PR Newswire
September 10, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Andy Silvernail

MEMPHIS, Tennessee — International Paper announced that its board of directors elected Andy Silvernail as Chairman of the International Paper Board of Directors in addition to his role as Chief Executive Officer (CEO), effective October 1, 2024. Mark Sutton, who has continued to serve in the role of Chairman of the Board since retiring as CEO in May, will retire from the Board on September 30, 2024. International Paper Lead Director Chris Connor said, “I’d like to thank Mark for his many years of service to IP and for his leadership as Chairman and CEO. …We are pleased that Andy is taking on the role of Chairman of the Board. In just four months with IP, he is off to a terrific start and has the team aligned on implementing our strategy.”

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Housing slowdown hits loggers hard

By Dee DePass
Associated Press in he Post Bulletin
September 10, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

BAUDETTE, Minn. — Like their father before them, brothers Dale and Wayne (Gib) Erickson harvest timber. The trees they cut down eventually become wood chips or crates, and their Baudette-based company has provided jobs for 20 workers. But the sagging housing market is starting to echo in the North Woods, and the Ericksons’ business is down 20 percent this year as a result. …With too much inventory sitting in stockyards, deliveries have stalled and prices have plunged. “I’d say our lumber sales are down about 20 percent,” he said. Most of Minnesota’s 300 logging firms are being hurt to some degree. …”It’s probably the worst market that we have seen for loggers for 25 or 35 years,” said Wayne Brandt, executive vice president of the Minnesota Timber Producers Association, a trade association.

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New Zealand eliminates $190 million in trade barriers to boost the economy

Todd McClay, Minister for Trade and Agriculture
Beehive.govt.nz
September 15, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Todd McClay

NEW ZEALAND — The Government has successfully removed trade barriers affecting nearly $190 million worth of exports to help grow the economy, Minister for Trade and Agriculture Todd McClay announced. “In the past year, we have resolved 14 Non Tariff Barriers (NTBs), returning significant value to kiwi exporters,” Mr McClay says. ….“Boosting the export value of farming, forestry, horticulture and wine production are vital to our economy, as we oppose distortionary agricultural subsidies through the WTO to enhance global food security. NTBs resolved include… Restored log exports to India following changes to NZ’s fumigation practices. “New Zealand exported $96.3 billion worth of goods and services in 2023. Over the next 12 months we will continue our focus on reducing NTBs including around costly EU deforestation regulations, Canadian dairy import restrictions, $300m of cosmetics exports to China and restrictions on structural timber exports to Australia.”

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Brazil asks EU to hold off on implementing deforestation law

By Lisandra Paraguassu
Reuters
September 11, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Brazil on Wednesday asked the European Union not to implement regulations in its deforestation law at the end of the year as scheduled and asked for it to be revised to avoid hurting Brazilian exports. In a letter to the European Commission seen by Reuters, the Brazilian government said the law banning the import of products linked to the destruction of the world’s forests could affect almost one third of Brazil’s exports to the EU. The law passed in 2022 by the European Parliament was adopted in June last year, allowing 18 months for companies to adapt. The law applies to soy, beef, palm oil, coffee, cocoa, rubber, wood and derivatives, including leather and furniture.

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Changes announced to commercial forestry regulations

MinterEllisonRuddWatts
September 11, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

The forestry sector is set for a major shake-up with the Government’s plan to overhaul national direction under the Resource Management Act (RMA). As part of this reform, the National Environmental Standard for Commercial Forestry (NES-CF) will be significantly updated, alongside seven new national direction instruments and revisions to 13 other existing policy statements and standards. These changes mark a pivotal moment for forestry and resource management in New Zealand. It appears likely that a local authority’s ability to introduce more stringent or lenient rules within their districts/regions will be significantly reduced. This is likely to be a positive step for the forestry sector, who have been grappling with different rules applying across their forests, increasing regulatory compliance and costs.

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Winstone Pulp International mill closures will be ‘catastrophic’ for Central North Island communities

Radio New Zealand News
September 10, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

A community leader says the closure of two Central North Island mills will be “catastrophic” for local towns. Hundreds of people are set to lose their jobs after one of the Central North Island’s biggest employers announced it will close down two of its mills – for good. …Community leaders and ministers had been rallying behind the scenes to cut a deal that would keep the mills open. …Liz Booker, who helped to launch the Rescue Ruapehu petition, told Checkpoint the closures would be “catastrophic” for Central North Island communities. ..Checkpoint host Lisa Owen questioned whether the government had done enough to intervene and prevent the closures. …An Official Information Act request would reveal that, Booker said. “I offered [Minister for Regional Development and Associate Minister for Energy] Shane Jones a cup of tea if he wanted to turn up, but he didn’t turn up.”

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Russian wood product companies target India as new export market amid sanctions

Lesprom
September 6, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

With sanctions cutting Russia off from European markets, wood product companies are seeking new export markets, as domestic consumption cannot absorb all production. Segezha Group, a major player in Russia’s timber industry, has identified India as a key market for future growth. During the Eastern Economic Forum, Segezha Group’s Vice President for External Relations, Nikolai Ivanov, emphasized India’s potential. According to Segezha Group’s official Telegram channel (in Russian), Ivanov pointed out that currently only 3% of Russian timber products are exported to India, with Segezha’s share being just 1%. However, the company plans to increase its shipments to India by 50% this year compared to 2022. Ivanov described this increase as the start of a long-term strategy, though he acknowledged that these are still small volumes compared to the market’s full potential.

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Decision on closure of central North Island mills pushed out

1News New Zealand
September 9, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

NEW ZEALAND — Workers at two mills in the central North Island face another sleepless night as the decision on whether operations will be shut down is pushed out by another day. Forestry company Winstone Pulp International, which runs Tangiwai Sawmill and Karioi Pulpmill, proposed to close the two sites indefinitely at a meeting last month. It would mean the loss of 230 jobs. The final decision on the closure was expected today but, in a statement, the company said it had extended the time frame for a decision until Tuesday afternoon. If it chose to shut the sites down, they were expected to do so by early October. Winston Pulp chief executive Mike Ryan said the company could not keep operating due to skyrocketing power prices. Energy costs had increased from $100 in September 2021 to $500 per MWh last month, he said.

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Villagers raise concerns over toxic lead legal battle at Scots chipboard factory

By Chris Marzella
The Daily Record UK
September 4, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Lead pollution fears have been raised after a chipboard manufacturer in Cowie won a legal battle to burn a factory by-product. West Fraser successfully argued in court that it should be allowed to burn a woody residue called ‘crumb’ at the site, despite environment watchdogs raising concerns. In July 2019, Norbord, the company which ran the Cowie site up until January 2021, applied to the Scottish Environmental Protection Agency (SEPA) to vary its pollution permit so that it would be able to burn the by-product. SEPA refused permission …In January 2021, Norbord was bought by West Fraser, which appealed to the sheriff court in Edinburgh in November 2021. On January 29 this year, a sheriff ruled in the company’s favour, though the written decision has still to be published. …Cowie Community Council is set to discuss the issue at a public meeting later this month where it’s hoped that representatives from West Fraser and SEPA will be in attendance.

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